Tuesday, December 16, 2025

 

From labs to local tables: How research Is helping fight food insecurity



Binghamton University, State University of New York consortium leverages academic interests to examine local food systems



Binghamton University

Monica Adams and Barrett Brenton 

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Monica Adams (left) and Barrett Brenton leverage academic expertise to help address food insecurity and access in Broome County. .

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Credit: Binghamton University, State University of New York





Following the COVID-19 pandemic, food insecurity became a pressing issue in Broome County, N.Y. In response, several members of the Binghamton University, State University of New York community established the (COVID-19) Food Justice Working Group (FJWG), a multidisciplinary campus collaboration aimed at researching and addressing challenges in the food system. During the same period, the Broome County Food Council (BCFC), a consortium of local organizations, emerged as a key resource for food access and distribution throughout the county.

Working together, they demonstrate the potential of academic institutions and local communities, leveraging University resources and educational expertise as collaborative partners, to address social issues in the communities surrounding university centers.

“Partnering with BCFC was a logical step for the FJWG, a group formed from a desire to generate knowledge and social action around food insecurity,” said Monica Adams, assistant professor of social work at Binghamton University and BCFC member.

In a recently published paper in Practicing Anthropology, former and current members of the FJWG explain their applied anthropological approach to understanding imbalances in the food system. While the pandemic provided the impetus to the group’s formation, there was already interest among University faculty in issues around food security, nutrition and sustainability. The FJWG members bring unique contributions based on professional histories and interests, and career goals.

FJWG members and paper authors include Adams; Aidan Gajewski ’24, MBA ’25, an environmental studies and economics student at Binghamton; Valerie Imbruce, director of the Center for Environment and Society and research associate professor at Washington College in Maryland; and Barrett Brenton, affiliated faculty and senior research scholar in the Anthropology Department and the Center for Civic Engagement’s faculty engagement coordinator, who co-led the formation of COVID-19 FJWG and currently sits on the steering committee of the BCFC.

“Holding membership at different levels of the Council complements the work of FJWG by allowing us to actively engage in promoting food justice through community-driven teaching and research,” said Brenton. “This type of research enables us to learn from the community concerning the most pressing challenges and the best ways to address them from the perspective of those embedded in the community doing the work.”

In 2022, the FJWG organized a workshop for about a dozen organizations involved in community gardening, emergency food services, school meals and agricultural extension. The goal was to identify issues within the region’s food systems. One important takeaway was the need for a centralized council to reduce redundancies, enhance information sharing and support broader county-wide initiatives. To facilitate this, a coordinator was hired with funding obtained by the Food Bank of the Southern Tier.

The following year, a survey was distributed across Broome County to evaluate the availability of resources, challenges related to food insecurity and issues affecting underserved communities. The results were analyzed and mapped by Melissa Haller, the undergraduate director of Digital and Data Studies at Binghamton University, along with several of her students as part of a community-engaged learning capstone project course. One of Adams’ social work students was employed to enter data from the hard-copy surveys.

The analysis resulted in “The Story of Food Insecurity in Broome County,” a visual representation of the availability of food-related resources throughout Broome County, as well as other critical demographic information, including transportation and service availability that impact access to food.

Feedback from the analysis led to the creation of the Broome County Food Access Plan in 2024. The plan features five strategic initiatives designed to enhance food access in several underserved communities within the county, including Whitney Point and the City of Binghamton. Additionally, it focuses on increasing nutrition resources in early childcare programs and community education. Each initiative has a two-year developmental plan.

“The goal of the FJWG is to support, observe and engage with existing structures and organizations, rather than to take the lead or initiate new projects,” said Brenton.

Four years later, the group remains focused on grant writing, public outreach events, participation in local and national conferences and advancing academic scholarship.

Future research projects will focus on evaluating the success of food councils using models from across New York state to inform the development of a state-wide food systems network. The group will continue to promote community-engaged learning and research opportunities for Binghamton students across multiple disciplines.

“Our emphasis on community-identified challenges involves community members actively in the research, from designing the project to interpreting the results, aiming to develop practical solutions and social change rather than just academic findings,” said Adams. “This mutually beneficial and reciprocal applied partnership supports the sustainability of local community initiatives.”

Current members of the FJWG group include Imbruce, Adams, Brenton, and the recent addition of Belinda Ramírez, an assistant professor of sociology whose interdisciplinary research focuses on food, climate and environmental justice.

Research was supported by a grant from Binghamton University Sustainable Communities TAE, the Human Rights Institute, and the External Scholarships and Undergraduate Research Center (ESURC).

Fossil Fuel Subsidies Are Leading U.S. and EU into Industrial Decline


 December 16, 2025

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The following is an interview with Hans-Josef Fell. Fell is the drafter of the Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG), a law that came into force in Germany 25 years ago and has been copied over 100 times in more than 60 countries. Hans-Josef Fell was a member of the German Bundestag from 1998 to 2013. As a leading climate figure of the Green Party he helped to advance the energy transition in Germany. Today, he is president of the Energy Watch Group and, together with climate activists such as Bill McKibben, an ambassador for 100% renewable energy. Fell has received numerous awards.

David Goeßmann: While greenhouse gases continue to rise to record levels globally, the U.S. is still the second-largest emitter in absolute terms, but with much higher per capita consumption and historical emissions than China. President Donald Trump has reversed the steps toward energy transition initiated under the Biden administration, attacked all environmental protection measures, and issued over 300 new oil and gas drilling permits while U.S. greenhouse gas emissions are going up again. In the EU especially the German government under Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) watered down the EU’s climate targets and undermined the EU’s ban on combustion engines from 2035. In Europe we see a boom of fossil gas and gas-fired power plants while overall ambition on climate is in rollback. How do you assess climate protection in the industrialized world?

Hans-Josef Fell: There is no climate protection worthy of the name in the rich countries, nor globally. The Earth’s temperature is accelerating toward three degrees Celsius by 2050, as new calculations by the German Meteorological Society and the German Physical Society show. The Energy Watch Group has also clearly described this; one only has to extrapolate the current exponentially rising temperature increase path of the last 20 years.

This alarming result is also clear, because as early as 1990, the limit of 350 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that is sustainable for human civilization was exceeded. Today, the atmosphere is already overloaded with almost 430 ppm. An effective climate protection target that could enable the planet, which is already overheated by more than 1.5 degrees Celsius in 2024, to cool down can therefore only be to reduce the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere (not to be confused with annual emissions!) to below 350 ppm.

This can only be achieved if all emissions are stopped in about two decades and, at the same time, huge amounts of carbon are removed from the atmosphere. The measures mentioned above and many others are irresponsibly counterproductive, as they even reward new increased emissions with tax breaks and, with tax subsidies, even promote the expansion of highly climate-damaging natural gas power plants and natural gas infrastructure. At the same time, these tax breaks for climate polluters place a further burden on the already highly indebted national budget, which could lead to crises that we remember all too well from Greece’s national bankruptcy crisis in 2010.

David Goeßmann: We see in different developed countries that emissions are going down, even in the U.S. the trend since 2005 shows a slight decrease. The EU has a climate goal to be climate neutral by 2050 while the Biden administration at least committed to net zero emissions by mid-century (Trump revoked that). Is that enough, and if not, why not?

Hans-Josef Fell: Since we need to return to 350 ppm in a few decades, climate neutrality in 2045 is far too late and far too weak. In addition to achieving a zero-emission economy, we also need a strong carbon-reducing economy, which can be achieved through reforestation, regenerative agriculture, and marine algae farming.

A zero-emission economy with 100 percent renewable energies and an emission-free circular economy is possible; all the technologies are there. All that is needed is the declared political and social will and strong investment from the financial sector and private individuals. Building an emission-free industry would also boost the economy. However, only China is currently pursuing such a strategy aggressively. In the EU and the US, fossil fuel interests have regained the upper hand.

David Goeßmann: As far as the fossil fuel rollback is concerned, the U.S. withdrew from the Paris Agreement under President Donald Trump and did not send an official delegation to COP30, the climate conference in Belém, Brazil. The EU has undermined the so called Green New Deal. You’re often in China. How do you see developments there in terms of climate protection and the energy transition compared to Europe and the U.S.?

Hans-Josef Fell: A zero-emission economy is based on an energy supply that is 100 percent renewable. If we had that globally, about 60 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions would be stopped. China alone—currently still the largest emitter of greenhouse gases—is on an industrial growth path toward this goal. 62 percent of global photovoltaic growth71 percent of global wind energy, and about 60 percent of all batteries and electric vehicles were brought to market in China last year. In 2024, more than 90 percent of the solar cells installed worldwide and 70 percent of electric car batteries were produced in China. Investment in clean energy has been growing for years, while production capacities are being expanded. In 2023, investment increased by 40 percent compared to the previous year.

This is the key driver of China’s economic boom, which has been ongoing for years. Europe, with its half-hearted renewable energy policy, and the U.S. under Trump, with its anti-energy transition agenda, are threatening to go into industrial decline. The industry of the near future will be clean, renewable, and emission-free. Those who still insist on subsidizing natural gas, fossil fuel combustion engines, fossil fuel heating systems, and fossil fuel-based industrial production will ultimately lose entire industries to China and end up in the poorhouse.

David Goeßmann: At the moment, we are seeing a backlash against the green transformation in many societies, especially in the rich industrialized countries. Do you nevertheless see positive developments in the global energy transition?

Hans-Josef Fell: Yes, renewable energies are advancing massively worldwide. However, this is being driven primarily by China and increasingly also by BRICS countries other than Russia [the BRICS group includes Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa]. Those who, like the U.S. and the EU, want to protect their own dirty fossil fuel economy from Chinese dominance with tariffs on solar products or electric cars will only lose market share, as we are already seeing clearly today with the German car manufacturer VW, Daimler, and BMW, which are late to the game and still half-hearted in their commitment to e-mobility.

David Goeßmann: You say that an energy transition can be completed within ten years. Explain how such a rapid transition could take place. What solutions are there and what needs to be done?

Hans-Josef Fell: Until around 2012, we had in Germany about 30 percent annual growth in solar energy, and until 2017, similar growth in wind energy. Had these growth rates in solar expansion not been halted in 2012 in the wake of the devastating amendments to the Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG) by Federal Environment Minister Peter Altmaier (CDU), and then in wind energy from 2017 onwards by Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel (SPD), Germany could have achieved a full supply of 100 percent green electricity by around 2022 with the corresponding parallel expansion of storage facilities. The increases in natural gas prices as a result of Putin’s war against Ukraine would have had little impact on our economy, energy security would have been very high, the average 81 billion euros in import costs for fossil fuels would have fallen dramatically, and emissions would have been significantly lower.

Today, we must build on the success story of the EEG from 2000 with its basic principles of fixed feed-in tariffs, whereby a modern EEG should also be geared towards system integration into the electricity grid. Then, with the simultaneous expansion of electric heating, e-vehicles, and industrial production, a full supply of 100 percent green electricity can be achieved by 2030. Such a market ramp-up would also give the domestic renewable energy industry a chance and reduce dependence on China.

David Goeßmann: If a rapid transition is possible and even economically advantageous, why is it not being implemented politically? Who is continuing to put the brakes on this?

Hans-Josef Fell: The fossil fuel and nuclear industries have a firm grip on large parts of the media, both traditional and social, and thus also on the political debate. Fake news is constantly being produced, e.g., that renewable energies are driving up electricity prices or that there is a nuclear renaissance in the world. Bavarian prime minister Markus Söder (CSU) recently took the cake by claiming that Germany could support its economy by quickly building small nuclear power plants like those already in operation in Canada. A glance at Canada shows that there are no such small nuclear reactors there, not even under construction. There are only two in the planning stage, and their completion is still up in the air. So even a high ranking politician can lie to the public with impunity.

David Goeßmann: In the broader debate, climate protection is often portrayed as a burden and socially unjust. In your opinion, what is wrong with the way the energy, transport, and agricultural transitions to protect the environment are discussed in the media?

Hans-Josef Fell: From the outset, the fossil fuel industry has managed to defame climate protection as a burden on the economy. However, this only applies to the fossil fuel industry, which will of course have to completely cease its business activities involving oil, gas, and coal. But climate protection is a booster for the clean, emission-free economy, as China is now making abundantly clear.

But even many climate activists have adopted the fossil fuel industry’s framing and talked about burden sharing in climate protection. Spending on renewable energies is not a cost burden, but rather an investment that creates jobs and tax revenue while reducing the costs of damage to health care due to poor air quality or environmental and climate damage. Climate protection is therefore not a burden, but an improvement in prosperity for everyone, except for businesses in the fossil fuel-polluting economy.

David Goeßmann: In recent years, environmental movements and climate activists have developed various strategies to promote more climate protection in countries. At the moment, it has become difficult to put the issue on the agenda. The pandemic, the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, and the rise of right-wing authoritarian parties have dominated the headlines. In your opinion, what strategies make sense to get governments to take climate action?

Hans-Josef Fell: Climate activists must finally free themselves from the narratives of fossil fuel industry representatives and demonstrate that climate protection is an essential contribution to the economy, creates new jobs and industries, reduces the costs of disease and environmental damage, relieves private households of high energy costs, and ultimately slows down the galloping national debt. Furthermore, the lack of climate protection is one of the causes of the major problems that are weighing so heavily on us: increasing refugee movements, famines as a result of crop failures, wars over oil or natural gas, fossil fuels as a means of political blackmail, and much more.

Let us finally stop leaving the debate to the fossil fuel and nuclear climate destroyers, of which the oil and gas industry alone has been making around $2.8 billion in net profits every day for 50 years, ultimately leaving behind more and more poverty, suffering, disease, and a destroyed planet.

David Goeßmann is a journalist based in Berlin/Germany. He has worked for several media outlets including Spiegel Online, ARD, and ZDF. His articles have appeared at TruthoutCommon Dreams and The Progressive. His books analyze climate and foreign policies, global justice, and media bias.

Trump Responds to Rob Reiner’s Murder by Mocking Him in Death


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After news broke that acclaimed Hollywood filmmaker Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, were found stabbed to death in their Los Angeles home on Sunday, December 14, Donald Trump took to social media and … wait for it … ridiculed Reiner in death, using the moment to rehash his long-running political attacks and to sneer at what he called Reiner’s “Trump Derangement Syndrome.”

The president of the United States—best known for his lack of empathy and better known for his cruel policies—apparently could not resist shitting on the still-warm bodies of Reiner and his wife Michele.

“A very sad thing happened last night in Hollywood,” the president wrote on Truth Social. “Rob Reiner, a tortured and struggling, but once very talented movie director and comedy star, has passed away, together with his wife, Michele, reportedly due to the anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding, and incurable affliction with a mind crippling disease known as TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME, sometimes referred to as TDS. He was known to have driven people CRAZY by his raging obsession of President Donald J. Trump, with his obvious paranoia reaching new heights as the Trump Administration surpassed all goals and expectations of greatness, and with the Golden Age of America upon us, perhaps like never before. May Rob and Michele rest in peace!”

Nick Reiner, the couple’s son, has been arrested, according to online jail records from the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department. He was booked on $4 million bail.

Rob Reiner, the son of the great comedian Carl Reiner,  made his name as Michael “Meathead” Stivic on All in the Family, then went on to direct classics such as This Is Spinal TapStand by MeThe Princess BrideWhen Harry Met Sally…, Misery and A Few Good Men.

CBS News reported that “Reiner was a longtime activist and prolific Democratic fundraiser who  gave hundreds of thousands of dollars to Democratic candidates and causes over the course of his life. And he was also a longtime critic of Mr. Trump, referring to him during his first term as ‘mentally unfit’ and ‘unqualified’ to be president.”

Jenna Ellis, a former lawyer for Mr. Trump’s 2020 presidential campaign, condemned the president’s message in a post on X. “A man and his wife were murdered last night,” she wrote. “This is NOT the appropriate response. The Right uniformly condemned political and celebratory responses to Charlie Kirk’s death. This is a horrible example from Trump (and surprising considering the two attempts on his own life) and should be condemned by everyone with any decency.”

Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky wrote on X, “Regardless of how you felt about Rob Reiner, this is inappropriate and disrespectful discourse about a man who was just brutally murdered. I guess my elected GOP colleagues, the VP, and White House staff will just ignore it because they’re afraid? I challenge anyone to defend it.”

There is no evidence from investigators that Reiner’s political views had anything to do with the homicide itself.

Bill Berkowitz is a longtime observer of the conservative movement. Read other articles by Bill.